UKIP’s rise has caught the establishment by surprise, with the main parties doing all they can to prevent the further rise of the right-wing populist party. However their success is likely to be limited by the difficulty that new parties have in breaking into a House of Commons distinguished by its continuing use of First Past the Post and a House of Lords which doesn’t hold elections at all. Stephen Barber argues that UKIP’s rise could spark unplanned constitutional reform to correct these undemocratic anomalies
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The General Election of 2015 looks set to be an exceptionally good one for the SNP, who look set to ...
Just how strong is the Conservatives mandate? With only 24.7% of eligible voters opting to support t...
Few expected the Coalition Government formed in the wake of the 2010 General Election to last as lon...
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)Clic...
Nigel Farage has recently come under fire from an influential member from within his own party for h...
As the constitutional fallout from the Scottish Independence Referendum campaign continues, Stephen ...
This May’s General Election saw the end of the first full coalition in post-war British politics, be...
Using the UK Independence Party, we examine the effects of sudden electoral success on an Anti-Polit...
There is an urgent need to move beyond a nineteenth century set of ideas about democracy and governa...
The First Past The Post electoral system exacerbates divisions between the different parts of Britai...
The paper examines the main changes in the UK party system that have occurred in recent decades. It...
One of the key distinctions between the 2014 European Parliament elections and previous elections ha...
Constitutional matters have dominated contemporary British politics for some time, and as Brexit dev...
The political ramifications of Brexit keep making themselves known, with Labour pondering Leadership...
Constitutional matters have dominated contemporary British politics for some time, and as Brexit dev...
The General Election of 2015 looks set to be an exceptionally good one for the SNP, who look set to ...